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Solution: Laziness, Impatience, and Hubrisby domm (Chaplain) |
on Mar 08, 2002 at 21:20 UTC ( [id://150427]=note: print w/replies, xml ) | Need Help?? |
use strict;Enable strict mode. There are no errors because of undefined vars because you used $a and $b, which are always defined, as they are used by sorting. For the same reason, you choose @INC;
map{$a++}('g','r','e','p');You set $a to 4.
$a=$a-$a--+$a++;or written a little bit cleaner $a=$a - $a-- + $a++; But still rather hard to understand, because of the way auto-in/decrement worksin suffix mode: What happens is (if I got it right): $a=$a - $a-- + $a++;$a is now 3, but 4 is substracted $a=3 - 4 + $a++; $a=-1 + $a++; $a is incremented to 4, but 3 (the old value) is used in the addition $a= -1 + 3$a is now 2
$a++;And now its 3
$b=int(rand($a));sets $b to a value between 0 and 2.
$b++increments it by one, so it is now 1, 2, or 3. Used to decide which virtue to print.
map {chomp;@INC=split(/\D/);push(@_,(int($INC$b/$b), int($INC$b+$a/$b)));}(<DATA>);Here you map over all elements of the DATA array, doing the following things: chomp;remove the line brake at the end of the line @INC=split(/\D/);Set @INC, by splitting the current line on non-numeric values, thereby removing all charaters from the stuff in DATA. This made me wonder, because first I thought you where using the characters hidden between the numbers as your data. But, as I then found out, you just tossed me a red herring that I gullibly swalloed. push(@_,(int($INC$b/$b),int($INC$b+$a/$b)))Now you modify your data structure. In the DATA-section, you stored the ascii values of each character (multiplied by either 1,2 or 3), like so (using the real characters): LIHamu (and these are NOT the 'L', the 'I', the 'H' etc you can see in the DATA section). With this code segment, you first get item number $b (and divide by $b, so it is now the real ascii value), then you get $b+$a. As $a is 3, this gets the next value of the selected virtue. The shorter virtues are space-padded at the end.
map{printf("%c",$_)}@_;Here you finally map over all values of @_, printing the character with the ascii value of $_. A nice way to prevent the much-overused chr. Voila. Nice work! Especially as it's not just one more japh. I espcially liked the auto-in/decrement stuff and the wrong track you laid in DATA. -- #!/usr/bin/perl -w just another perl hacker print+seek(DATA,$=*.3,@-)?~~<DATA>:$:__DATA__
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